Capt Caveman
Lifer
- Jan 30, 2005
- 34,543
- 651
- 126
Yes. The question should be: "What will home PCs resemble in after 2020?"
Now, if you're talking about a big biege box, then no.

And sadly most of attention for Game development is for a) mobile devices and b) consoles
PC folks get screwed as always....
this but without the need for your phone to even be on or near you.
In short, you dock your device and it’s your computer!! you pick it up, and it’s your mobile!!!.
For me it is storage. Unless a phone can store 3-4 Terabytes I am not going to switch to a tablet. I have way too many photos, and I sure as hell am not going to pay for masses of cloud storage space.
Also I like the fact that a big tower is something most thieves are not going to take. People lose their phones left and right. Imagine having all you data only on a phone and poof a thief steals it. Unless everything is backed up to the cloud then you will be in a world of hurt.
I also like backing stuff up to CDs and DVDs.
I will continue to get desktop PCs until there is something really compelling to replace them. Current tablets suck as a PC replacement.
But then again I am old school, I still buy CDs.
Don't worry, just wait until their stuff is gone or the company goes under and they are SOL.
I don't see how people can even rely on "cloud" storage....but hey
For anybody who thinks this isn't coming:
http://www.linuxcandy.com/2012/02/ubuntu-for-androiddock-your-mobile-and-its-your-computer.html
Which racing sim do you play? :awe:Dunno about anyone else, but I'll be. Until my phone replaces a large widescreen monitor, TrackIR, keyboard, etc for gaming, I'll stick to a PC.
Windows 8 is heading there too for all its flaws. First person to figure it all out will probably make a boatload of cash.
For anybody who thinks this isn't coming:
http://www.linuxcandy.com/2012/02/ubuntu-for-androiddock-your-mobile-and-its-your-computer.html
I wouldn't care to speculate that far into the future. I can visualize a phone being powerful enough to run most programs, and dropping it in a dock at home which gives a full keyboard and other peripherals. When that day comes, and I have FULL control of the device, I'll give up the desktop. Other people will too.
When a smart phone or tablet can basically run any program 92 percent of the people care about, will there still be home p.c.'s being sold in 2020?
At some point I wonder if today's pc makers will start selling tablet kits, with a tablet, monitor, keyboard and mouse. Or perhaps just a hdmi cable and keyboard and mouse?
For anybody who thinks this isn't coming:
http://www.linuxcandy.com/2012/02/ubuntu-for-androiddock-your-mobile-and-its-your-computer.html
>> COVID_19By 2020 we will all be dead or undead.
This is mainly a software problem. The past few Apple SoCs are nearly on par with "desktop" CPUs, and the latest and greatest Snapdragon is close enough. Unfortunately, mobile OS's and their ecosystem are "different" enough that most people won't use them for productivity. The most common complaint about iPadOS is that it isn't unleashing the full capability of M1-based iPad Pros (current gen. is M2), to replace PCs. Instead of splitting my device usage time across a laptop, phone and iPad, it would be nice to converge these down to two (or ideally one) devices.Still don't have my dockable phone I fully control. Still have my desktop. I did pull out a bluetooth keyboard today I bought years ago for phones. Still works, but it wasn't as useful as I thought it would be when I bought it. I doubt I have 15 minutes of real time on it since I got it almost 10 years ago.
>> COVID_19
Either you got the shot (undead) or died from the covid, mostly.
Excellent prediction.
